The eddy-driven jet and storm-track responses to boundary-layer drag: insights from an idealized dry GCM study
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences American Meteorological Society 76:4 (2019) 1055-1076
Abstract:
Simulations using a dry, idealized general circulation model (GCM) are conducted to systematically investigate the eddy-driven jet鈥檚 sensitivity to the location of boundary-layer drag. Perturbations of boundary-layer drag solely within the baroclinic zone reproduce the eddy-driven jet responses to global drag variations. The implications for current theories of eddy-driven jet shifts are discussed. Hemispherically-asymmetric drag simulations in equinoctial and solstitial thermal conditions show that perturbations of surface drag in one hemisphere have negligible effects on the strength and latitude of the eddy-driven jet in the opposite hemisphere. Jet speed exhibits larger sensitivities to surface drag in perpetual winter simulations, while sensitivities in jet latitude are larger in perpetual summer simulations. Near-surface drag simulations with an Earth-like continental profile show how surface drag may facilitate tropical-extratropical teleconnections by modifying waveguides through changes in jet latitude. Longitudinally confined drag simulations demonstrate a novel mechanism for localizing storm tracks. A theoretical analysis is used to show that asymmetries in the Bernoulli function within the baroclinic zone are important for the eddy-driven jet latitude responses because they directly modulate the sensitivity of the zonal-mean zonal wind to drag in the boundarylayer momentum balance. The simulations contained herein provide a rich array of case studies against which to test current theories of eddy-driven jet and storm-track shifts; and the results affirm the importance of correct, well-constrained locations and intensities of boundary-layer drag in order to reduce jet and storm-track biases in climate and forecast models.Contrasting mechanisms of summer blocking over western Eurasia
Geophysical Research Letters Wiley 45:21 (2018) 12,040-12,048
Abstract:
The formation of summer blocking events appears to have been mostly studied for a few individual events often associated with heat waves. Here we investigate summer blocking event dynamics in three areas over western Eurasia in order to draw some more general conclusions, mostly in terms of high鈥 and low鈥恌requency processes. A 2鈥怐 blocking event detection algorithm is applied to the 500鈥恏Pa鈥恎eopotential field from the ERA鈥40 and ERA鈥怚nterim reanalyses over the 1958鈥2017 period. It is shown that both high鈥 and low鈥恌requency processes are important to initiate blocking events over southern central Europe. Blocking events over western Russia are preceded by a significant low鈥恌requency large鈥恠cale wave train, and their formation and maintenance are dominated by low鈥恌requency processes only. Finally, it is shown that the risk of extreme seasons such as summer 2010 cannot be accurately estimated from the Poisson statistics of past events.Ensemble sensitivity analysis of Greenland blocking in medium鈥恟ange forecasts
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 144:716 (2018) 2358-2379
Abstract:
The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is the leading mode of variability in the large scale circulation over the North Atlantic in winter, and strongly influences the weather and climate of Europe. On synoptic timescales, the negative phase of the NAO often corresponds to the occurrence of a blocking episode over Greenland. Hence, the dynamics and predictability of these blocking events is of interest for the prediction of the NAO and its related impacts over a wide region. Ensemble sensitivity analysis utilises the information contained in probabilistic forecast ensembles to calculate a statistical relationship between a forecast metric and some precursor condition. Here the method is applied to 15鈥恉ay forecasts of a set of 26 Greenland blocking events using the state鈥恛f鈥恡he鈥恆rt European Centre for Medium鈥怰ange Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) forecasting system. The ensemble sensitivity analysis shows that Greenland blocking does not develop in isolation in these forecasts, but instead the blocking is sensitive to remote precursors, such as 500 hPa and 50 hPa geopotential height, particularly in the low鈥恌requency flow. In general, there are more significant sensitivities to anomalies in the tropics than in the polar regions. Stratospheric sensitivities tend to emerge at later lead times than tropospheric sensitivities. The strongest and most robust sensitivities correspond to a Rossby wave precursor reaching from the Pacific basin across North America.The importance of stratospheric initial conditions for winter North Atlantic Oscillation predictability and implications for the signal鈥恡o鈥恘oise paradox
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society John Wiley and Sons, Ltd. 145:718 (2018) Part A, 131-146
Abstract:
This study investigates the influence of atmospheric initial conditions on winter seasonal forecasts of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Hindcast (or reforecast) experiments 鈥 which differ only in their initial conditions 鈥 are performed over the period 1960鈥2009, using prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) and sea鈥恑ce boundary conditions. The first experiment (鈥淓RA鈥40/Int IC鈥) is initialized using the ERA鈥40 and ERA鈥怚nterim reanalysis datasets, which assimilate upper鈥恆ir, satellite and surface observations; the second experiment (鈥淓RA鈥20C IC鈥) is initialized using the ERA鈥20C reanalysis dataset, which assimilates only surface observations. The ensemble mean NAO skill is largest in ERA鈥40/Int IC (r鈥=鈥0.54), which is initialized with the superior reanalysis data. Moreover, ERA鈥20C IC did not exhibit significantly more NAO hindcast skill (r鈥=鈥0.38) than in a third experiment, which was initialized with incorrect (shuffled) initial conditions. The ERA鈥40/Interim and ERA鈥20C initial conditions differ substantially in the tropical stratosphere, where the quasi鈥恇iennial oscillation (QBO) of zonal winds is not present in ERA鈥20C. The QBO hindcasts are highly skilful in ERA鈥40/Int IC 鈥 albeit with a somewhat weaker equatorial zonal wind amplitude in the lower stratosphere 鈥 but are incorrect in ERA鈥20C IC, indicating that the QBO is responsible for the additional NAO hindcast skill; this is despite the model exhibiting a relatively weak teleconnection between the QBO and NAO. The influence of the QBO is further demonstrated by regressing out the QBO influence from each of the hindcast experiments, after which the difference in NAO hindcast skill between the experiments is negligible. Whilst ERA鈥40/Int IC demonstrates a more skilful NAO hindcast, it appears to have a relatively weak predictable signal; this is the so鈥恈alled 鈥渟ignal鈥恡o鈥恘oise paradox鈥 identified in previous studies. Diagnostically amplifying the (weak) QBO鈥揘AO teleconnection increases the ensemble鈥恗ean NAO signal with negligible impact on the NAO hindcast skill, after which the signal鈥恡o鈥恘oise problem seemingly disappears.Recent observed changes in the North Atlantic climate system with a focus on 2005-2016
International Journal of Climatology John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 38:14 (2018) 5050-5076